A subcortical pathway to the right amygdala mediating “unseen” fear
- *Wellcome Department of Cognitive Neurology, Queen Square, London, WC1N 3BG, United Kingdom; †Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Section of Psychiatry and Psychology, Karolinska Hospital, S-17176 Stockholm, Sweden; and ‡Royal Free and University College Hospitals School of Medicine, Rowland Hill Street, London NW3 2DF, United Kingdom
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Communicated by Lawrence Weiskrantz, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom (received for review October 20, 1998)
Abstract
Neuroimaging studies have shown differential amygdala responses to masked (“unseen”) emotional stimuli. How visual signals related to such unseen stimuli access the amygdala is unknown. A possible pathway, involving the superior colliculus and pulvinar, is suggested by observations of patients with striate cortex lesions who show preserved abilities to localize and discriminate visual stimuli that are not consciously perceived (“blindsight”). We used measures of right amygdala neural activity acquired from volunteer subjects viewing masked fear-conditioned faces to determine whether a colliculo-pulvinar pathway was engaged during processing of these unseen target stimuli. Increased connectivity between right amygdala, pulvinar, and superior colliculus was evident when fear-conditioned faces were unseen rather than seen. Right amygdala connectivity with fusiform and orbitofrontal cortices decreased in the same condition. By contrast, the left amygdala, whose activity did not discriminate seen and unseen fear-conditioned targets, showed no masking-dependent changes in connectivity with superior colliculus or pulvinar. These results suggest that a subcortical pathway to the right amygdala, via midbrain and thalamus, provides a route for processing behaviorally relevant unseen visual events in parallel to a cortical route necessary for conscious identification.
ABBREVIATIONS
- PET,
- positron-emission tomography;
- CS,
- conditioned stimulus;
- SPM,
- statistical parametric mapping;
- CBF,
- cerebral blood flow
- Received October 20, 1998.
- Accepted December 9, 1998.
- Copyright © 1999, The National Academy of Sciences



